The Associated PressPlayers once feared going up against Lleyton Hewitt. He was relentless, imperturbable, a fighter -- the one true heir to Jimmy Connors.

But that was a long time ago. Rafael Nadal made Hewitt look like a very ordinary player today. The final score: 6-3, 6-4, 6-3.

We are now offering up two sets of standings (yes, that means there could be two winners at the end of the tournament -- but it looks like the final results for both will end up being pretty darn close).

The first one continues to rank contestants based on the total number of games won by Nadal's opponents during the tournament.

The second one puts more weight on each individual match prediction. The number of games by which you're off for a match carries through the contest. There's no way to regain that ground. Thus, not offering a prediction for a round is particularly costly. (Also, new rule: If you don't offer a prediction in three rounds, you're out.)

OK, now that the official paperwork is done, meet our new leaders: Lucky7even and Clipperton. Dani, Michaela, Danderson and Girltennis are close behind. Here are the standings:

Key: Magic Number = Total number of games actually won against
Nadal; TP = Total Games Predicted; GO = Games Off (from the lead)

So that's three down and four to go. Next up: Claycourt specialist Thomaz
Bellucci. Bellucci has the game and talent to be a French Open champion -- if
he wasn't in the Nadal era. So how will the Brazilian do against Rafa?Tell us on this post how many
games Bellucci will win in his fourth-round match against Nadal.